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  • Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    DUKAS_191629872_NUR
    Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    Asaad Hassan Al-Sheibani is the Syrian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates in Damascus, on november 29, 2025. (Photo by Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto).

     

  • Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    DUKAS_191629863_NUR
    Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    Asaad Hassan Al-Sheibani is the Syrian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates in Damascus, on november 29, 2025. (Photo by Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto).

     

  • Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    DUKAS_191629860_NUR
    Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    Asaad Hassan Al-Sheibani is the Syrian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates in Damascus, on november 29, 2025. (Photo by Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto).

     

  • Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    DUKAS_191629851_NUR
    Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    Asaad Hassan Al-Sheibani is the Syrian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates in Damascus, on november 29, 2025. (Photo by Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto).

     

  • Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    DUKAS_191629845_NUR
    Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    Asaad Hassan Al-Sheibani is the Syrian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates in Damascus, on november 29, 2025. (Photo by Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto).

     

  • Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    DUKAS_191629843_NUR
    Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    Asaad Hassan Al-Sheibani is the Syrian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates in Damascus, on november 29, 2025. (Photo by Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto).

     

  • Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    DUKAS_191629833_NUR
    Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    Asaad Hassan Al-Sheibani is the Syrian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates in Damascus, on november 29, 2025. (Photo by Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto).

     

  • Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    DUKAS_191629830_NUR
    Syrian Foreign Minister Receives Danish Counterpart To Discuss Refugee Return And Strengthening Bilateral Cooperation
    Asaad Hassan Al-Sheibani is the Syrian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates in Damascus, on november 29, 2025. (Photo by Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto).

     

  • Syrian President Ahmad al-Shara
    DUKAS_184589959_POL
    Syrian President Ahmad al-Shara
    MAY 5, 2925- Damascu: Syrian President Ahmad Al-Shara receives a delegation from Azerbaijan, headed by Azerbaijani Deputy Prime Minister Samir Sharifov, at the Syrian presidential palace, Al-Shaab Palace, in Damascus, on 05 May 2025. (SANA /APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Syrian President al-Shara meets with US delegation
    DUKAS_184589958_POL
    Syrian President al-Shara meets with US delegation
    May 02, 2025 - Damascus, Syria: Syrian President, Ahmad Al-Sharea, meets with a US delegation headed by businessman, Jonathan Bass, at Al-Shaab Palace, the Syrian presidential palace in Damascus. (SANA/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Syrian President al-Shara meets with US delegation
    DUKAS_184589957_POL
    Syrian President al-Shara meets with US delegation
    May 02, 2025 - Damascus, Syria: Syrian President, Ahmad Al-Sharea, meets with a US delegation headed by businessman, Jonathan Bass, at Al-Shaab Palace, the Syrian presidential palace in Damascus. (SANA/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Syrian President al-Shara meets with US delegation
    DUKAS_184589956_POL
    Syrian President al-Shara meets with US delegation
    May 02, 2025 - Damascus, Syria: Syrian President, Ahmad Al-Sharea, meets with a US delegation headed by businessman, Jonathan Bass, at Al-Shaab Palace, the Syrian presidential palace in Damascus. (SANA/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Rnita Dacho, 'Pure joy and awful sadness': Syrians in Australia cautiously optimistic for their homeland’s future
    DUKAS_178885522_EYE
    Rnita Dacho, 'Pure joy and awful sadness': Syrians in Australia cautiously optimistic for their homeland’s future
    Rnita Dacho, 'Pure joy and awful sadness': Syrians in Australia cautiously optimistic for their homeland’s future.

    Many who fled Bashar al-Assad's brutal crackdowns say they are shocked at how quickly the regime fell - but amid relief and elation, minority groups are wary about the future under HTS.

    Rnita Dacho fled Syria with her family when she was 21 year old in 2012. However they left behind her father who was in one of the most notorious Bashar al-Assad prisons. Her father had campaigned against tBashar al-Assad who had run Syria as a totalitarian police state. He father managed to eventually get out of prison alive and join them Sydney. She says it is too early to celebrate for Syria but hopes for the best. Sydney, Australia. 11 December 2024.

    Jessica Hromas / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Rnita Dacho, 'Pure joy and awful sadness': Syrians in Australia cautiously optimistic for their homeland’s future
    DUKAS_178885521_EYE
    Rnita Dacho, 'Pure joy and awful sadness': Syrians in Australia cautiously optimistic for their homeland’s future
    Rnita Dacho, 'Pure joy and awful sadness': Syrians in Australia cautiously optimistic for their homeland’s future.

    Many who fled Bashar al-Assad's brutal crackdowns say they are shocked at how quickly the regime fell - but amid relief and elation, minority groups are wary about the future under HTS.

    Rnita Dacho fled Syria with her family when she was 21 year old in 2012. However they left behind her father who was in one of the most notorious Bashar al-Assad prisons. Her father had campaigned against tBashar al-Assad who had run Syria as a totalitarian police state. He father managed to eventually get out of prison alive and join them Sydney. She says it is too early to celebrate for Syria but hopes for the best. Sydney, Australia. 11 December 2024.

    Jessica Hromas / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Rnita Dacho, 'Pure joy and awful sadness': Syrians in Australia cautiously optimistic for their homeland’s future
    DUKAS_178885520_EYE
    Rnita Dacho, 'Pure joy and awful sadness': Syrians in Australia cautiously optimistic for their homeland’s future
    Rnita Dacho, 'Pure joy and awful sadness': Syrians in Australia cautiously optimistic for their homeland’s future.

    Many who fled Bashar al-Assad's brutal crackdowns say they are shocked at how quickly the regime fell - but amid relief and elation, minority groups are wary about the future under HTS.

    Rnita Dacho fled Syria with her family when she was 21 year old in 2012. However they left behind her father who was in one of the most notorious Bashar al-Assad prisons. Her father had campaigned against tBashar al-Assad who had run Syria as a totalitarian police state. He father managed to eventually get out of prison alive and join them Sydney. She says it is too early to celebrate for Syria but hopes for the best. Sydney, Australia. 11 December 2024.

    Jessica Hromas / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • 'We all lost. That's where hatred leads': 10 years after her son was beheaded, Diane Foley on why she met one of his killers
    DUKAS_165876184_EYE
    'We all lost. That's where hatred leads': 10 years after her son was beheaded, Diane Foley on why she met one of his killers
    In 2014, terrorists took US photojournalist James Foley into the Syrian desert, decapitated him, then shocked the world with video footage of his death. His mother Diane Foley talks about her doomed attempts to save him, her mission to help today's hostages, and the meeting that helped her to heal.

    Diane Foley photographed at Wolfeboro Bay in her hometown of Wolfeboro, NH
    10 February 2024.

    Robyn Twomey / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©Robyn Twomey 2024

     

  • 'We all lost. That's where hatred leads': 10 years after her son was beheaded, Diane Foley on why she met one of his killers
    DUKAS_165876185_EYE
    'We all lost. That's where hatred leads': 10 years after her son was beheaded, Diane Foley on why she met one of his killers
    In 2014, terrorists took US photojournalist James Foley into the Syrian desert, decapitated him, then shocked the world with video footage of his death. His mother Diane Foley talks about her doomed attempts to save him, her mission to help today's hostages, and the meeting that helped her to heal.

    Diane Foley photographed on the deck at her home in Wolfeboro, NH
    10 February 2024.

    Robyn Twomey / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©Robyn Twomey 2024

     

  • 'We all lost. That's where hatred leads': 10 years after her son was beheaded, Diane Foley on why she met one of his killers
    DUKAS_165876182_EYE
    'We all lost. That's where hatred leads': 10 years after her son was beheaded, Diane Foley on why she met one of his killers
    In 2014, terrorists took US photojournalist James Foley into the Syrian desert, decapitated him, then shocked the world with video footage of his death. His mother Diane Foley talks about her doomed attempts to save him, her mission to help today's hostages, and the meeting that helped her to heal.

    Diane Foley photographed at her home in Wolfeboro, NH
    10 February 2024.

    Robyn Twomey / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©Robyn Twomey 2024

     

  • 'We all lost. That's where hatred leads': 10 years after her son was beheaded, Diane Foley on why she met one of his killers
    DUKAS_165876188_EYE
    'We all lost. That's where hatred leads': 10 years after her son was beheaded, Diane Foley on why she met one of his killers
    In 2014, terrorists took US photojournalist James Foley into the Syrian desert, decapitated him, then shocked the world with video footage of his death. His mother Diane Foley talks about her doomed attempts to save him, her mission to help today's hostages, and the meeting that helped her to heal.

    Diane Foley photographed at her home in Wolfeboro, NH
    10 February 2024.

    Robyn Twomey / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©Robyn Twomey 2024

     

  • NEWS - Operation des US-Militärs in Syrien tötet IS-Führer
    DUK10147851_010
    NEWS - Operation des US-Militärs in Syrien tötet IS-Führer
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Abdulaziz KETAZ/UPI/Shutterstock (12788085b)
    People check a destroyed house after an operation by the U.S. military in the Syrian village of Atmeh, in Idlib province, Syria, Thursday, February. 3, 2022. U.S. special forces carried out what the Pentagon said was a successful, large-scale counterterrorism raid in northwestern Syria early Thursday. President Joe Biden said on 03 February that a U.S. raid in Syria killed Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi - the leader of ISIS. .
    Operation by The U.S. Military in the Syria Killed Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi Al-Qurayshi - The Leader of ISIS, Idlib - 03 Feb 2022

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Operation des US-Militärs in Syrien tötet IS-Führer
    DUK10147851_009
    NEWS - Operation des US-Militärs in Syrien tötet IS-Führer
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Abdulaziz KETAZ/UPI/Shutterstock (12788085d)
    People check a destroyed house after an operation by the U.S. military in the Syrian village of Atmeh, in Idlib province, Syria, Thursday, February. 3, 2022. U.S. special forces carried out what the Pentagon said was a successful, large-scale counterterrorism raid in northwestern Syria early Thursday. President Joe Biden said on 03 February that a U.S. raid in Syria killed Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi - the leader of ISIS. .
    Operation by The U.S. Military in the Syria Killed Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi Al-Qurayshi - The Leader of ISIS, Idlib - 03 Feb 2022

    (c) Dukas

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636149_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: General Mazloum Abdi, the commander of the Syrian Democratic Forces in Syria during a meeting at a base in northeast Syria.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636094_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Graves of fallen soldiers from the Syrian Democratic Forces seen inside a cemetery near the town of Hasakah, in Northeast Syria.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636141_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Graves of fallen soldiers from the Syrian Democratic Forces seen inside a cemetery near the town of Hasakah, in Northeast Syria.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636139_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: A woman walks inside the al-Hol camp which houses displaced people, in Hasakah province of Northeast Syria.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636142_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Displaced people inside the the al-Hol camp which is located in Hasakah province of Northeast Syria.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636213_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Men working at a makeshift oil refinery near the town of Rmelan in Northeastern Syria.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636092_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Workers carry a motor pump at a makeshift oil refinery near the town of Rmelan in Northeastern Syria.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636148_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: A man pumps gas at a makeshift gas-station near the town of Shaddadi, in Hasakah province.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636214_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Two young boys working at a makeshift gas-station near the town of Shaddadi, in Hasakah province.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636098_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Children walk past the rubble of a destroyed house in Baghuz, in Deir el-Zour province.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636106_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: A local farmer drives his tractor past bullet riddled shops on the outskirts of Baghuz in Deir el-Zour province.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636093_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Soldiers of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) talk with a local farmer, during a patrol near the town of Baghuz in Deir el-Zour province.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636206_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: A soldier of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) walks through a pomegranate orchard during a patrol near the town of Baghuz in Deir el-Zour province.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636209_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Soldiers of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) pick pomegranates, during a patrol near the town of Baghuz in Deir el-Zour province.
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  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636099_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: A soldier of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) carries pomegranates he picked up during a patrol near the town of Baghuz in Deir el-Zour province.
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  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636137_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Soldiers of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) stand on a hill overlooking the Euphrates river, near the border with Iraq, in Deir el-Zour province.
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  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636193_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Soldiers of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) stand guard on a hill overlooking the Euphrates river, near the border with Iraq, in Deir el-Zour province.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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  • ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    DUKAS_130636143_EYE
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again
    ‘A lull not a loss’: Islamic State is rebuilding in Syria, say Kurdish forces. Those who fought the so-called caliphate fear a US withdrawal could help the terrorist group to rise again.
    Pictured: Loqman Khalil, commander of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) of Deir el-Zour province.
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  • How Syria's disinformation wars destroyed the co-founder of the White Helmets.  In November 2019, James Le Mesurier, the British co-founder of the Syrian rescue group, fell to his death in Istanbul. What led an internationally celebrated humanitarian to t
    DUKAS_119500438_EYE
    How Syria's disinformation wars destroyed the co-founder of the White Helmets. In November 2019, James Le Mesurier, the British co-founder of the Syrian rescue group, fell to his death in Istanbul. What led an internationally celebrated humanitarian to t
    Emma Winberg, in her house in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Swedish citizen Winberg is the widow of late former British army officer and co-founder of the 'White Helmets' volunteer organization in Syria James Le Mesurier.

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  • How Syria's disinformation wars destroyed the co-founder of the White Helmets.  In November 2019, James Le Mesurier, the British co-founder of the Syrian rescue group, fell to his death in Istanbul. What led an internationally celebrated humanitarian to t
    DUKAS_119500400_EYE
    How Syria's disinformation wars destroyed the co-founder of the White Helmets. In November 2019, James Le Mesurier, the British co-founder of the Syrian rescue group, fell to his death in Istanbul. What led an internationally celebrated humanitarian to t
    Emma Winberg, in her house in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Swedish citizen Winberg is the widow of late former British army officer and co-founder of the 'White Helmets' volunteer organization in Syria James Le Mesurier.

    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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  • How Syria's disinformation wars destroyed the co-founder of the White Helmets.  In November 2019, James Le Mesurier, the British co-founder of the Syrian rescue group, fell to his death in Istanbul. What led an internationally celebrated humanitarian to t
    DUKAS_119500403_EYE
    How Syria's disinformation wars destroyed the co-founder of the White Helmets. In November 2019, James Le Mesurier, the British co-founder of the Syrian rescue group, fell to his death in Istanbul. What led an internationally celebrated humanitarian to t
    Emma Winberg, in her house in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Swedish citizen Winberg is the widow of late former British army officer and co-founder of the 'White Helmets' volunteer organization in Syria James Le Mesurier.

    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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  • How Syria's disinformation wars destroyed the co-founder of the White Helmets.  In November 2019, James Le Mesurier, the British co-founder of the Syrian rescue group, fell to his death in Istanbul. What led an internationally celebrated humanitarian to t
    DUKAS_119500401_EYE
    How Syria's disinformation wars destroyed the co-founder of the White Helmets. In November 2019, James Le Mesurier, the British co-founder of the Syrian rescue group, fell to his death in Istanbul. What led an internationally celebrated humanitarian to t
    Emma Winberg, in her house in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Swedish citizen Winberg is the widow of late former British army officer and co-founder of the 'White Helmets' volunteer organization in Syria James Le Mesurier.

    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    DUKAS_114752429_EYE
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them.
    Mehdi ei-Beij who fled with his family a major pro-government forces offensive to retake the M4 highway in the Idlib Governorate, seen in a makeshift camp where he stays with other internally displaced people, near the Syrian Turkish border, on 6 March, 2020.
    A major pro-government forces offensive, codenamed ìDawn of Idlibî, which began on December 2019 with the goal of opening the M4 and M5 highways to civilian traffic and the elimination of rebel control over the Idlib Governorate has forced more than 900,000 civilians, many of them women and children, to flee towards the Syrian Turkish border. The huge displacement of people, who are trapped in shrinking space between the pro-government forces and the border with Turkey has prompted the UN to warn of an imminent ìbloodbathî.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    DUKAS_114752380_EYE
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them.
    A makeshift camp of newly internally displaced people who fled a major pro-government forces offensive to retake the M4 highway in the Idlib Governorate, seen near the Syrian Turkish border, on 6 March, 2020.
    A major pro-government forces offensive, codenamed ìDawn of Idlibî, which began on December 2019 with the goal of opening the M4 and M5 highways to civilian traffic and the elimination of rebel control over the Idlib Governorate has forced more than 900,000 civilians, many of them women and children, to flee towards the Syrian Turkish border. The huge displacement of people, who are trapped in shrinking space between the pro-government forces and the border with Turkey has prompted the UN to warn of an imminent ìbloodbathî.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    DUKAS_114752421_EYE
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them.
    Jaber Sheikh, a commander of the Harakat Ahrar al-Sham al-Islamiyya group photographed in a temporary HQ in the town of Al Fuíah in the Idlib Governorate, on 6 March, 2020.
    A major pro-government forces offensive, codenamed ìDawn of Idlibî, which began on December 2019 with the goal of opening the M4 and M5 highways to civilian traffic and the elimination of rebel control over the Idlib Governorate has forced more than 900,000 civilians, many of them women and children, to flee towards the Syrian Turkish border. The huge displacement of people, who are trapped in shrinking space between the pro-government forces and the border with Turkey has prompted the UN to warn of an imminent ìbloodbathî.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    DUKAS_114752426_EYE
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them.
    A group of men, who fled a major pro-government forces offensive to retake the M4 Highway in the Idlib Governorate, and a group of children seen at a makeshift reservation near the Syrian Turkish border, on 6 March, 2020.
    A major pro-government forces offensive, codenamed ìDawn of Idlibî, which began on December 2019 with the goal of opening the M4 and M5 highways to civilian traffic and the elimination of rebel control over the Idlib Governorate has forced more than 900,000 civilians, many of them women and children, to flee towards the Syrian Turkish border. The huge displacement of people, who are trapped in shrinking space between the pro-government forces and the border with Turkey has prompted the UN to warn of an imminent ìbloodbathî.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    DUKAS_114752379_EYE
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them.
    A young boy and his brother stand next to a truck at makeshift reservation near the Syrian Turkish border, on 6 March, 2020.
    A major pro-government forces offensive, codenamed ìDawn of Idlibî, which began on December 2019 with the goal of opening the M4 and M5 highways to civilian traffic and the elimination of rebel control over the Idlib Governorate has forced more than 900,000 civilians, many of them women and children, to flee towards the Syrian Turkish border. The huge displacement of people, who are trapped in shrinking space between the pro-government forces and the border with Turkey has prompted the UN to warn of an imminent ìbloodbathî.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    DUKAS_114752418_EYE
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them.
    Young children who fled their homes following a major pro-government forces offensive to retake the M4 highway in the Idlib Governorate herd sheep in a tent, at a makeshift reservation near the Syrian Turkish border, on 6 March, 2020.
    A major pro-government forces offensive, codenamed ìDawn of Idlibî, which began on December 2019 with the goal of opening the M4 and M5 highways to civilian traffic and the elimination of rebel control over the Idlib Governorate has forced more than 900,000 civilians, many of them women and children, to flee towards the Syrian Turkish border. The huge displacement of people, who are trapped in shrinking space between the pro-government forces and the border with Turkey has prompted the UN to warn of an imminent ìbloodbathî.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    DUKAS_114752424_EYE
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them
    Hounded by war, can Idlib's desperate civilians outrun final assault? Accustomed to being exiles in their own land, many Syrians are resigned to the next cruel twist fate may deliver them.
    A young boy peaks through the entrance of a tent, at makeshift tent reservation by the side of a road near the Syrian Turkish border, on 6 March, 2020.
    A major pro-government forces offensive, codenamed ìDawn of Idlibî, which began on December 2019 with the goal of opening the M4 and M5 highways to civilian traffic and the elimination of rebel control over the Idlib Governorate has forced more than 900,000 civilians, many of them women and children, to flee towards the Syrian Turkish border. The huge displacement of people, who are trapped in shrinking space between the pro-government forces and the border with Turkey has prompted the UN to warn of an imminent ìbloodbathî.
    © Achilleas Zavallis / Guardian / eyevine

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